Syrian Refugee Crisis

Mike

Audioshark
Staff member
Joined
Apr 2, 2013
Messages
30,575
Location
Sarasota, FL
I've been debating whether to post this or not. I PLEAD with you all, let's not turn this human tragedy into something political.

But I can't remember any recent news hitting me harder than seeing those poor poor children's bodies washing up on the shores.

I was pleased to read about the leadership from Germany taking a lead "to do more". I read that the UK and even the Pope has gotten involved.
 
I've been debating whether to post this or not. I PLEAD with you all, let's not turn this human tragedy into something political.

But I can't remember any recent news hitting me harder than seeing those poor poor children's bodies washing up on the shores.

I was pleased to read about the leadership from Germany taking a lead "to do more". I read that the UK and even the Pope has gotten involved.

Mike-I personally don't know how to talk about what is going on with the Syrian refugees without the discussion becoming political. I will just say it's a tragic indictment of our world that in 2015 things like this are still happening.
 
Mike-I personally don't know how to talk about what is going on with the Syrian refugees without the discussion becoming political. I will just say it's a tragic indictment of our world that in 2015 things like this are still happening.

That will suffice! I don't think those poor children would care which side of the fence we are on.
 
I've been debating whether to post this or not. I PLEAD with you all, let's not turn this human tragedy into something political.

But I can't remember any recent news hitting me harder than seeing those poor poor children's bodies washing up on the shores.

I was pleased to read about the leadership from Germany taking a lead "to do more". I read that the UK and even the Pope has gotten involved.

Such a tragic event taking place. According to the U.N., more than half of all Syrian refugees are under the age of 18. Most have been out of school for months, if not years.
 
I have no idea how to deal with this issue, for either those escaping, or those trapped under ISIS or government control. However, things will get worse before better, and it is almost guaranteed some of the refugees will cause social issues in their new host country. It will just be another source of religious fanatics to cause havoc in society.
 
I have no idea how to deal with this issue, for either those escaping, or those trapped under ISIS or government control. However, things will get worse before better, and it is almost guaranteed some of the refugees will cause social issues in their new host country. It will just be another source of religious fanatics to cause havoc in society.

Seeing the little dead child is truly heart breaking.
There is talk of ISIS fanatics embedded in the refugees. There needs to be proper screening.
Those of us in Canada we are in the midst of an election. This has suddenly become a hot button issue. I'm not voting for Harper but on this issue he is saying the right thing on screening. There easily could be better implementation from our Gov.
You know we will take in the refugees we always do.
 
Staying away from the politics but when I got home alone from work I broke down and cried over that haunting photo.
 
Its not just Syria, its Iraq as well. Total collapse of those countries and it could spread to more neighbouring states. North Africa as well has tons of refugees.
 
DELETED BY ADMIN

Asking not to make this political was too much?
 
Heartbreaking. I am originally Lebanese. I was born there and left in 1983 at age 13. I lived a good portion of the civil war (1975-1991), with brief stints In London for 1 year at outbreak of war in 1975 and 3 months in Greece in 1982. I saw many displaced ethnic groups within Lebanon as well as semi-permanent Palestinian refugee camps set up since 1948 and again in 1967. The devastation that war causes on society, on the individual's psyche, on families who experience unthinkable tragic losses, on the civic and social structures that bind communities together, and on basic civil rights like the right to have access to food, shelter, medical access, education for one's children, and the right to earn a living is devastating beyond anything that can be put into words. Those who are lucky to leave and start new lives are few relative to the millions who have to stay behind because they do not have the means to flee their tragic circumstances.

The breakdowns in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have wrought so much destruction, pain and tragedy to so many millions of people and it is hard to see an end to any of it any time soon. In the case of Lebanon, the war ended as the sectarian parties to the fighting along with the Lebanese populace at large were just exhausted from 16 years of unabated conflict, destruction, and a sense of hopelessness. Unfortunately in Syria and Iraq, with the added fuel to the fire that is ISIS, it is hard to see an end to the underlying fighting indigenous factions. I am very pessimistic unfortunately about the entire region and am heart broken for it's people who are the ultimate victims of this senseless violence.
 
Heartbreaking. I am originally Lebanese. I was born there and left in 1983 at age 13. I lived a good portion of the civil war (1975-1991), with brief stints In London for 1 year at outbreak of war in 1975 and 3 months in Greece in 1982. I saw many displaced ethnic groups within Lebanon as well as semi-permanent Palestinian refugee camps set up since 1948 and again in 1967. The devastation that war causes on society, on the individual's psyche, on families who experience unthinkable tragic losses, on the civic and social structures that bind communities together, and on basic civil rights like the right to have access to food, shelter, medical access, education for one's children, and the right to earn a living is devastating beyond anything that can be put into words. Those who are lucky to leave and start new lives are few relative to the millions who have to stay behind because they do not have the means to flee their tragic circumstances.

The breakdowns in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have wrought so much destruction, pain and tragedy to so many millions of people and it is hard to see an end to any of it any time soon. In the case of Lebanon, the war ended as the sectarian parties to the fighting along with the Lebanese populace at large were just exhausted from 16 years of unabated conflict, destruction, and a sense of hopelessness. Unfortunately in Syria and Iraq, with the added fuel to the fire that is ISIS, it is hard to see an end to the underlying fighting indigenous factions. I am very pessimistic unfortunately about the entire region and am heart broken for it's people who are the ultimate victims of this senseless violence.

I think this is an excellent summation of what is going on right now.
 
Cyril, thanks for your story. You have much more insight into the plight of the innocent than most of us.
 
Last edited:
One site says 800,000 another says 4 million are leaving. With the M5 under threat the main highway out they say that number will double or more than double. That is a lot of people to be on the move sad thing . But what choice does the average person have but to try and make a better life . It will be hard for any country to take in the kind of numbers that need a new home. By this time in history we should be better than this.
 
I still have faith in the goodness of mankind, but it sure gets difficult. My thoughts and prayers to all those suffering.

"And as I walked on
Through troubled times
My spirit gets so downhearted sometimes
So where are the strong
And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Sweet harmony.

'Cause each time I feel it slippin' away, just makes me wanna cry.
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding? Ohhhh
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding?"

Nick Lowe
 
Cyril, thanks for your story. You have much more insight into the plight of the innocent than most of us.

Mark...I am very fortunate that our family had the means to leave on our own terms without being in desperate straits. Yes I grew up in a civil war and it was dangerous, and we endured through some tough times, but we had the ability to leave when it was the right time for our family to do so. These poor people are fleeing because they see no other choice. I can't imagine how desperate one must feel to risk the types of dangerous treks through land and sea that these poor folks are enduring.
 


The dead little boy
washed ashore face down on the beach is a powerful and stark reminder of the cold cruelty of mankind. The only blessing in this tragic waste of a young child's life is this small boy will no longer have to suffer the ravages of war. It is such a dichotomy that humans have the capacity to love, nurture, protect, share and be kind while at the same time possess such animalistic instincts to be ferociously cruel, murderous, and calculatingly heartless. The world is full of wondrous beauty and treacherous evil. It has always been so and I fear it will eternally remain.

This lifeless boy has become the poster child of man's inhumanity to man, yet his precious life is no more or less important than any other human life whether it be a child or an adult, male or female. That this child was so innocent and disconnected from the forces that claimed his life is a solemn reminder of the dangerous impact caused by man's greed and ruthless quest for power. History shows us that religion often becomes a convenient cloaking tool that disguises and clouds the true forces at play.

It seems to me that man is the only animal on Earth completely out of sync with the forces of nature. I wonder sometimes that human beings are not native to this planet and consequently will never survive due to our inherent lack of essential connectivity to the rhythm and balance that all other living things on the planet follow naturally.

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 56 million people die each year, an average of about 153,424 people each day, nearly equal to the population of Syracuse, New York dying with each sunrise, yet with all of these deaths it takes a photograph of surf lapping around a small lifeless boy face down in the beach sand to drive home the sanctity of life. All life is important, no one more than another. The challenge is how will we ever raise the whole of human awareness to value every life. Presently it seems an impossibility.
 
Dan,

Please remove that picture. I think we all understand the enormity of this situation.
 
Back
Top